In today’s club music landscape, the concept of honesty is adrift and it’s far easier to find yourself interacting with shrouded personalities and several layers of irony than you are any creative or intellectual honesty. New York’s Rizzla, part of the Kunq collective and a longtime Fade to Mind representative, has always been an outspoken social media advocate, laying down prescient post-colonial and identity critiques when few others are willing to step up. Utilizing “Iron Cages” and “Twitch Queen”, two tracks from his Iron Cages EP (out now on F2M), the video below is the sort potent statement that few contemporary musicians are willing to make, a synthesis of footage from several dozen uprisings, both from news stations and handheld cameras. Tonight, Rizzla celebrates the EP release with Kingdom, Prince Will and Dangelxxx in Los Angeles, bringing his spastic, 140+ styles to the basement of the Belasco Theatre. And if you’ve never seen Rizzla or the F2M crew throw down, you know that this one will be special, both a celebration for the release of Iron Cages and another reason why the label still has so many biters.
Premiere: Botaz Mix For Bread SF
After featuring Rabit, Sheen, Korma and Lyeform at their last party, San Francisco’s Bread crew is bringing out another huge bill to the Bay Area, this time featuring a heavy load of U.S. talent. New York’s Doctor Jeep is probably the biggest name on the lineup and it’s fair to say that the long-time promoter of UK (and beyond) sounds deserves that position, but don’t sleep on Angeleno Patrick Brian and Cybersonic LA resident Sha Sha Kimbo either. For Bread #2, we premiered a mix from Rushmore and gave away a few tickets for the night and this time around, we’ve got Bread resident Botaz pon deck with a selection of slamming drum tracks from Helix, Akito and Krueger and a short helping of Snootie Wild to break up the mood. Ballast and JAVASCRIPT close out the night, which goes down at 1192 Folsom on November 6. You can check out the mix (and track list) at the Bread site + enter for a chance to win a pair of tickets to the party itself. Not one to miss Bay Area folk.
Dexter Duckett Mix For The Astral Plane
“I’ve had this complex since I was young where I’ve just needed to develop like it’s a disease.” Hailing from Adelaide, Dexter Duckett is still a teenager, but has approached dance music with a far more developed critical lens than most artists two or three times his age. This isn’t a story about some prodigious kid making big via Soundcloud, but almost the exact opposite, an isolated young musician taking in a glut of material, garnering inspiration from a select few, Brooklyn’s flextune artists and 90s scramz groups for example, and consciously critiquing the remainder. On a recent trip to Los Angeles, I sat down with Dexter at a cafe serving $9 juice shots to talk about rejecting accelerationism, desensitization to violence and spoken word artist Sunni Patterson. The rest of the interview will appear next week, but now we’ve got Duckett’s viscerally touching Astral Plane mix, a conflagration of shoegaze, ambient, bashment that seems to simultaneously mask and attempt to point out, in the most blatant manner, the contextual differences between these forms.
“I’m going to start incorporating my vocals into my music soon. i need a more hype performance aspect to my music that isn’t this static DJ shit.” After staying in Los Angeles for a few weeks with his girlfriend, Duckett just arrived in Europe and will be performing in London (at Exquisite), Berlin (at Creamcake) and in Stockholm. The move to more vocal work seems prescient for Duckett and, despite not having an official release to his name, it fits into his fight against irony and general emotional distance, as well as a push forward for an artist who’s already reinvented himself several times. Duckett’s Astral Plane mix is heavy on unheard original work and should shine a good deal of light into the aesthetic he’s developed over the past year and continues to rework, music from Teen Suicide occupying the same space as the aforementioned Sunni Patterson and YAYOYANOH.
Teen Suicide – Anne
GRKZGL – Danger Music
Sunni Paterson – Yacub Majeed (poem)
Dexter Duckett – Let Me Take Over U
N-prolenta – Van Vicker
Gabrielle – Long, Plain and Straight
Dexter Duckett – Blue Blood
Dexter Duckett – EU Riddim (shleepy edit)
Dexter Duckett – Sweetheart
Dexter Duckett – Timyaya’s Kick Inside
DJ Ambitious – Lala Land
Lovesliescrushing – Overdose
Mya Gomez – Skype Tone (edit)
Dexter Duckett – Little Piggy
Dexter Duckett – Silence (edit)
Uninamise – The Prayer
YAYOYANOH – On & On Rmx
Willow/Potential Kidd – Freq7/Tight Tight
Teen Suicide – Anne
GRKZGL – Danger Music
Premiere: Kali Mutsa – El Cuerpo (Imaabs Remix)
“El Cuerpo” is about a lady who used to drive out my evil spirits. When I was a little girl, she taught me that “el cuerpo” or the physical body was the only thing we had. She taught me to embrace and accept death, and distance myself from the fear associated with nothingness. It’s a lesson that has stuck with me ever since.Imaabs gave the track a ritualistic tone that’s much more melancholic than the original. The darkness is hypnotic and closer to the version we play live together. He’s managed to make a version I like more than the original. I love it.”
‘Psychotropia’ Out October 27, Stream GROVESTREET’s “Hazardous Child” On FACT
Astral Plane Recordings is back with our second compilation release and the follow up to 2014’s Heterotopia. Out in full in only two weeks as a free release (Oct 27), the good folks at FACT Magazine announced Psychotropia earlier and premiered GROVESTREET‘s noise excursion to jump off the campaign. The tape features 12 artists new to The Astral Plane family and an array of left-field takes on club tropes past and present. We’ve had a busy summer working on a show for Radar Radio, compiling our monthly For Club Use Only column, and preparing this tape so it’s a real pleasure to get this out as we enter the cold months.
Giveaway: Still Life w/ Lee Bannon & Nadus @ Los Globos
Next Thursday (10/22), Still Life is bringing two Astral Plane favorites to Los Globos, Ninja Tune artist Lee Bannon and Pelican Fly/Thread/Teklife reppin’ Nadus. The two are hardly easy to pin down, although expect plenty of moody, harmonically dexterous hip hop interpretations, booming Jersey kick patterns and the occasional foray into jungle and footwork. Bannon’s Alternate/Endings LP, released by Ninja Tune in 2014, marked a breakout for the longtime hip hop producer from Northern California, an on-the-cusp foray into rhythmic experimentation that tended to leave the mellow side of his beat repertoire in the past. This year’s Pattern of Excel, also released on Ninja Tune, sounds more post-rock than jungle, but maintains Bannon’s unique timbral qualities and is a thoroughly pleasing listen.
Meanwhile, Nadus’ tour schedule feels never-ending and coming off the back of 2014’s Broke City EP, he joined Rustie on a massive U.S. tour. One of Jersey club’s foremost ambassadors, the man born Rahshon Bright prefers not to be limited by the Newark scene he’s helped develop, a point he noted in an excellent interview with FACT Magazine yesterday. Rounding out the lineup are Charlotte MC Deniro Farrar, Gianni Lee and J Drago. Enter your favorite Ninja Tune single in the entry form below to be entered for your chance at a pair of tickets for Thursday’s show.
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Premiere: Rushmore – H-O-T
Hitting at the crossroads of rap, footwork, electro and more, Rushmore is finishing off the Trax Couture World Series in style with Vol. 12, an eight rack effort stacked with low slung club weapons. Whereas most of the World Series has come in fast, hard and mechanical, Rushmore’s final entry into the series he has expertly curated takes the tempo down a bit, recalling everything from hyphy and g-funk to footwork and electro. If you’ve been lucky enough to attend the perpetually hyped House of Trax parties Rushmore throws in London, you’ll probably be familiar with these sounds, if not the tracks from Vol. 12 in particular, and its clear that Rushmore has been learning from the best as he distills these classic dance sounds into his own, ever-growing repertoire. Be sure to grab World Series Vol. 12 from the Trax Couture store on November 2.
Decibel Festival 2015: Review
After several years of attending Decibel Festival,its position as one of the most well run, tasteful electronic music-focused events in the United States is pretty much set it stone. From the top on down, the festival is run by professional employees and volunteers who go above and beyond to make the most out of the experience. After a few blow out years that included larger lineups and more adventurous venue choices, Decibel narrowed their purview slightly for the 12th edition of the Festival, focusing more on the clubs around Bell Town, Downtown, SoDo and Capitol Hill. Unfortunately, we weren’t able to catch the entire range of the festival, arriving late Thursday night, which meant missing acts like Jlin, The Black Madonna and Kid Smpl.
Despite a general adherence to what are, by-and-large, considered underground sounds, the remainder of the festival did come off as fairly monochromatic, featuring beats-oriented trap (or trap-oriented beats if you will) at the Beat Alchemy, Sublime, TeamSupreme and, we assume, Soulection nights on one hand and fairly banal tech house on the other. Of course, seeing acts like Function, Vril and Recondite broke the monotony somewhat, but compared to past years when the lineup seemed to reflect what sounds would arise over the next several years, Decibel 2015 only seemed to encapsulate the white bread sounds of the past half-decade. Granted, living in Los Angeles, where trappy beats and techy house rule all, certainly has a good deal to do with our distaste for a good portion of this year’s lineup, but we would argue that it’s more to do with the extremely high expectations that the Decibel team has built up in the past.
That all sounds quite negative of course, but we do have to say that the festival itself was a blast, from the first opportunity on Friday night to reacquaint ourselves with Seattle’s dancefloors and dancers to the weekend stealing performances from Dasha Rush and Tim Hecker at The Triple Door. Having come down with a cold the day before the festival, the meditative, futurist sounds of Rush’s performance at the Dark Overtones showcase early Saturday night proved especially impressive, the Russian impresarios brief vocals and bleak, swarming drones having an indelible effect on our memories of DB 2015. The fact that her performance sticks in the mind more than Hecker’s isn’t a slight to the Canadian artist either as his live set, heavy on materials from Virgins, was absolutely breathtaking, bringing a physicality to the album that couldn’t exist in a home listening environment.
As for the rest of the weekend, Function and Recondite brought special performances to their respective showcases, proving that fairly straightforward techno and house can still be loads of fun and, at The Showbox on Friday night, Laurel Halo ran through a remarkably confident set, bridging the gap between squeaky noise experiments and full bodied, four-on-the-floor numbers. On the downside, our brief appearance at Bonobo made us realize why we don’t attend most American festivals anymore, the neon-clad crowd fighting hand-over-fist to be on the floor for an upbeat set that hardly fit snuggly on the British artist. The unveiling of each Decibel Festival is always a special process and, despite not being able to participate in full this year and not feeling totally engaged by the lineup, we eagerly anticipate the 2016 edition, sure to involve plenty of curve balls and fascinating left-field programming. We’ll see y’all in the six next year.
Toxe Mix For The Astral Plane
A key member of the formidable Staycore crew, Gothenburg, Sweden-based Toxe (FKA Tove Agelii) has asserted her position as one of the most forceful, talented artists in the club music world over the past year, pushing an aesthetic that is as raw and unforgiving as it is delicate and inspiring. With a year left of high school and her debut Muscle Memory EP out on October 16 via Staycore, Toxe has seen a remarkably quick rise into the popular consciousness, first garnering attention for tracks like “Martial Arts” and “Offense” and further bolstering her credentials via collaborations with fellow Staycore members Dinamarca and Mechatok. Meanwhile, Tove started the ever-growing Sisters Facebook group, an in increasingly influential space for female producers, DJs, writers and label employees to share music, discuss sexism in the dance music world and occasionally work to take down a repugnant label head. And while Tove doesn’t like to take credit for founding Sisters, her role in instigating the movement is undisputed and her place as a positive and motivating presence for other female producers is well known.
With Muscle Memory out next week and a move from Gothenburg planned for next year, it’s easy to see Toxe’s name spreading like wildfire in the not too distant future, especially considering how fully formed and considered the EP is. Her Astral Plane mix is also remarkably consistent, showing off Toxe’s ability to switch up tempo with ease and utilize a range of vocals (from Missy Elliot to Jandro) over tracks from Muscle Memory and efforts from producers like v1984, Kamixlo and Zutzut (not to mention a host of her Staycore co-conspirators). It’s an all-enveloping listen that, despite changing speed several times, always seems to be moving at an energizing pace, smacking the listener with brusque, machinic kick patterns while soothing those hits with brief flits of angelic melodies and addicting hook work. We spoke with Tove via email about the mix, Sisters and the concept behind Muscle Memory, which is about as sure a thing as we’ve heard all year, words which can be found after the jump/below the fold. Also check out the full track list below the interview.
Letta Mix For The Astral Plane
A little while back, Los Angeles-based Letta sent Tomas at Coyote Records a few demos. The London-based label head became enamored with the works and hit Letta back, starting a process that would eventually become Testimony, his debut album out next week on Coyote. Nominally a grime outlet, Coyote works to break artists (Spokes, Silk Road Assassins, Forever Forever, etc.) with a left field approach to the London sound, melding tradition with wildly inventive approaches to melody. In that context, Letta’s inclusion in the Coyote fold makes all too much sense, but it’s been far from a linear path to this point, a story of addiction, rekindled inspiration and long lost family ties that we outlined in our interview with a few weeks ago. Last night, Letta took to the decks at the Coyote Boiler Room in London (still looping to our knowledge), sharing the stage with Last Japan, AJ Tracey and more and strutting Testimony and other material on his biggest stage yet. And while a record like Testimony isn’t exactly the banging club record that most Boiler Room audiences prefer, it fit seamlessly with performances from the rest of the Coyote roster, belying Letta’s status as a consummate outsider and snuffing out any doubts as to why he has been brought in for the label’s first full length release.
Listening to Letta’s Astral Plane mix a few days before his departure for the London, it becomes clear that his love for outsider music, whether that be Gang of Four or Mr. Mitch, seems to mesh easily with the weirder strains of modern rap and R&B. It’s not ever day that Ciara and Akira or Loom and D-Lo sit side by side, but through his own bootlegs and a few additions from Purple Tape Pedigree’s own Geng, the mix seems to come together with a somewhat jarring cinematic grace, topped off with well chosen and well placed dialogue snippets from The Wire. It shows off a more mischievous side of Letta’s repertoire as well, seen in his past bootleg work and hidden just below the surface throughout Testimony. This is most apparent in the way he works banger/big room quality vocal work over decidedly introspective beat work, drawing out qualities in both components that might otherwise have lied dormant. Letta will be hitting a good deal of radio while he’s in London so be on the lookout for those announcements and don’t forget to pre-order Testimony (out October 7)!











